THE NEW YORKER watchful: they are waiting for the main chance. If either of us speaks to them, they ask Harry to get them jobs. O F course, the big executives are quite different. The ones at the head of Harry's studio are very nice to us, though when they ask him to dinner, they turn to me after a little while and say: "And you, too; of course you must come." That makes Harry angry. He thinks I do not try to make friends. But if I act natural, I get the feeling that they think I am trying to be noticed and get in the movies too. ] heir wives are very nice. One wife, who is very pretty, told me that the first six months after she married and came out to the çoast, she used to eat too much every day for lunch so as to feel ill in the afternoons and have some- thing to think about. She has several friends who are also the wives of ex- ecutIves. They do big jigsaw puzzles together, and in the evenings they see movies with their husbands in their own drawing-rooms. I do not think they see anyone else much except at the nec- essary parties and dinners, which are all really to do with business. E veryw here they go, people are all trying to get something out of them or sell them ideas, or sell them themselves, which makes it hard to be at ease with them. When Harry's first picture was pre- viewed, he seemed to make quite a hit. N ow we stay at home ourselves in the evenings when he gets time off, be- cause everywhere in public boys and women clamor for autographs and paw him. It is not much fun even going to the movies when he has to keep his hat pulled down and try to look like someone else, and it is a queer feeling always to be conscious of ey<!s and whispering, like wearing the mark of Cain. One evening when it seemed a sin to stay in, we drove up Mount Wilson along precipices, to the observatory. Dozens of people were waiting to go in. An assistant taking the tickets at the entrance eXplained how foolish it was of people to come all that way and J " ,ø-. I . \.' I 1, \,.,' .;. ". " ': " " :',:.. ",. ì...: ; ,.... ... ..r: .bI I ..:..; .:.:. : it ,:;: ' :1 ;;:::: H :; -tr ,f""':" .:::: :. '.::':: .. , .......:: r ". .:.: ':-, _.. ", :. '" ::;:::;: ,<:'.. ? . -- : %t::" ::;-..: # " ':T .> %f . \i;j;" . :f':: -":::' fI :::::...' i: :: ::..:=:' ./' ....:...: .,':.:.' " ..,,':. :.'<< :::.":. {:, ;;; :. ..;:: .:=-.:: .:.:.....: ;-:-:.-. :: : 1" . ; t!: r4' t-\ " . ......;...: ';:.:'--: ,,'$ ;; .,.' '$: . t ,., IifR i-. !' .:?,<:) Of '," l;j 'lt:'.. t ,';':':', Pabst Blue Ribbon '/Ä ,... .'<(; "l}r :: ti_" , Beer Yesterday's, Today's and Tomorrow's ::;.."' ' ', tI :,>-- .J ,r "' 1 dB: 1 :p;\ø:Ør.:,;h 1 t:. tt Ä hf)iß ,: Standard of Quality '::.::' :::: :".': .:.:- l :: PA B ST BLUE RIBBON ðÆe fße&L 1 @ 1933 P.P.CORP. 47 . ...:.: J::,.,, il .J'..:-.":";';: :'!"':.):: :;,:;;:::-.";;. .. .. : .......=::;". tÆ. )f}y